1 ^ % I il. li. The Battalion College Station (Brazos County), Texas PAGE 4 Friday, February 22, 1957 Fish Seek 4 th Win Aga ins tShorth orn s Ending a five-game losing streak, with a 74-72 victory over Baylor”s Cubs, the A&M Fish pur sue a fourth victory of the season against Texas’ flashy Shorthorns in Austin Saturday night. A 73-62 victim of the Shorthorns three weeks ago here in White Coliseum, the Fish try to make it two in a row and match an earlier streak when they topped the Hous ton freshmen, 61-58 and Wharton JC, 76-53, in consecutive games. The overtime triumph at the ex pense of Baylor saw the Fish hit for perhaps their best night from the field, scoring with 27 of 65 field goal attempts for a fine 41.5 per cent. The Fish with • their best backboard effort controlled 67 rebounds to the Cubs’ 35 with Wayne Lawrence snatching 22, Sammy Myers 16 and Dave Corson 15. Lawrence, netting 32 points, boosted his season scoring to 240 points and a 26.6 average for his best output of the year. James Anderson of Greenville, on the basis of his 16 point total, pulled into a second-place tie with Corson in Fish scoring. Corson and Anderson have total ed 82 points in the nine game sea son for an average of 9.1 points, followed by Myers with 56 points HOLIDAY Friday, February 22, 1957 being a Holiday, in observance of George Washington’s Birthday, the undersigned will observe that date as a Holiday and not be open for business. FIRST NATIONAL BANK CITY NATIONAL BANK FIRST STATE BANK & TRUST CO. COLLEGE STATION STATE BANK BRYAN BUILDING AND LOAN ASS’N. Battle Pennies, in Gregory Gym By BARRY HART Led by a trio of sophomores, the Aggie cagers journey into the land of the coin tomorrow night when they meet the University of Texas Longhorns in Austin’s Gregory Gym at 8 p.m. Mediocre on the road, the Steers of Coach Marshall Hughes are great at home, and, with the accompaniment of 7,500 home town fans throwing paper and Aggie Swimmers Meet UT Saturday By BARRY HART A&M’s swimmers move into Austin tomorrow afternoon to take on the always-dangerous University of Texas mer men. The Aggie Fish get wet starting at 1 p.m. with the var sity hitting the water at 3. Coach Art Adamson takes 13 of his varsity performers and 12 freshmen into the state capital to try the Longhorn swimmers. The Aggies, beaten only by Florida State in the past two years, edged Texas, 46-38 here in 1956. “It’s going to be a rugged meet,” observed Adamson of the Texas battle. “They picked up a couple of good boys at mid-semester, including Tracey Word, that will give them a better-balanced team.” The Steers should be strong est in diving and in the free style races. In the Southwest Conference relays earlier this season, the Texas foursome of Jim Barden, Tommy Smith, Jerrell SENIOR GUARD TED HARROD—will see action in an Aggie uniform for the next-to-the-last time tomorrow night in Gregory Gym as the Cadets battle the Longhorns in Austin, Harrod has scored 118 points on the season and 88 in league play. j£) €sso Extra GASOLINE prevents the ‘knock you cannot Engineers call it a trace knock,” and only the trained ear can hear it. But trace knock, like any knock, robs your engine of its power, forecasts engine damage. 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Bryant to Get Car as Grid Titlists Feted A&M’s Southwest Conference champion grid team will be feted by the A&M clubs of Texas with a buffet-style dinner-dance to morrow at 7 p.m. at the Houston Club in Houston. Before the dinner, head coach and Athletic Director Paul (Bear) Bryant will be g*iven a 1957 Cadi llac at a private party by a small group of close friends including several non-Aggies. A full house of more than 700 persons will fill the Texas Room at «$12.50 a plate to honor the only Aggie team to win the conference title since 1941. Bryant’s eleven went undefeated through the sea son, with only a 14-14 tie to the University of Houston marring their record. Holder and Joe Lee Neal set a new 400-yard freestyle relay of 3:36, breaking their own 1956 mark of 3:38.2. A&M’s Tetsuo Okamoto will probably sweep the 440 and 220 yard freestyle races, although his specialty is the 1500. The Aggies are 2-1 on the season after winning the SWC relays. Ad amson’s Cadets lost to the Florida swimmers, 52-35, then blasted Rice, 56-30, and Northwest Louisiana, 60-26. The Fish have won their two out ings, 47-30, against Rice and 41-36 over Houston Reagan high school and should win without much trouble. SMU got the cream of the first-year crop with A&M the remainder while the Longhorns picked up virtually nothing. Orlando Cossani, the 24-year-old freshman from Concepcion del Ur- ugray, Argentina, broke the Amer ican 20-yard course, 100-yard, but terfly record of 60.5 owned by Yale’s Stanton Smith and set in 1951. Cossani raced to a 58.6. Making the trip for the varsity are Norman Ufer, Dick Hunkier, Bob Barlow, Okamoto, Roger Bur ton, Jim Dye, Bruce Martin, Dub by Godfrey, Henry Goff, Charles Cook, Lindsey Blayney and Jer ry Mount, pennies, are almost unbeatable on their 40 Acres. Texas conquered the league-leading SMU Mustangs for their only conference loss ear lier in the year in Gregory, then lost to the defending champions in Dallas, 79-56. The Aggies bounced the Steers, 69-67, in overtime in White Coli seum, but expect a somewhat rougher go tomorrow night. Coach Ken Loeffler’s crew are 6-16 on the season and 2-8 in conference play while the Texas five stand 11-10 for the year and one notch above the Aggies in the league standings with a 3-6 mark. Once again A&M’s George Me- haffey duels the great Ray Downs of Texas. Both scored 23 points in the Aggies’ victory here, but Downs has scored 464 points so far in 1957 to Mehaffey’s 300. A&M’s three fine sophomores— Neil Swisher, Ernie Turner and Jim McNichol — have been doing most of the scoring in the past three games. Mehaffey was injur ed in the Arkansas contest and has been at sub-par efficiency since. He did not play against SMU in Dallas Tuesday. OHS Kittens Win Cage Pair The Consolidated Junior High Kittens took both ends of a double- header from the Navasota Fangs in their final cage games of the season last night in Tiger Gym. Tied at the end of the regula tion game, 39-39, the Kitten “A” team got hot and bounced the visi tors, 45-40, while their younger teammates mauled the Fang “B” team, 38-12. Jack Armistead, who paced the night’s scoring with 16 points, bucketed two jump shots and Joe Olian, second in the scoring with 11, hit a set shot while the Fangs managed only a free throw in the overtime period. The Kittens out-rebounded the Navasota five, 58-40. At one time, during the third period, the CHS team lead, 29-20, but the visitors pulled to 29-28 at the end of the third quarter. HERE ARE THIS WEEK’S TIE-BREAKERS IN OLD GOLD’S PUZZLES TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 4 ICO. JSl CLUE: Benjamin Franklin participated in the founding of this schbol. Later, the first uni versity medical school in the country was established here. CLUE: This New England university was chartered in 1869. A theological seminary, founded in 1839, was its forerunner, and was absorbed as the university’s first de partment. ANSWER 1 ANSWER 2_ Name A ddress City College . State TIE-BREAKING PUZZLE NO. 5 WAV 2H1 CLUE: This Catholic university for men, conducted by Jesuit Fathers, is located in a town founded as a mission in 1777. The university was opened in 1851. CLUE: This women’s college, founded in 1879, is affiliated with a famous university for men. It is named to honor an early benefactor of the men’s university. ANSWER 1. ANSWER 2. Name Address^ City College State HUMBLE HUMBLE OIL & REFINING COMPANY HOLD UNTIL YOU HAVE COMPLETED ALL EIGHT TIE-BREAKERS All participants who completed the initial set of twenty-four puzzles correctly are required to solve a series of eight tie-breakers, in order to compete for the prizes in the tie. Tie-breakers four and five are published herein and the remaining three puzzles will appear in successive issues. Remember—first prize is a TOUR FOR TWO AROUND THE WORLD —or $5,000 cash . .. and there are 85 other valuable prizes now tied for. TRY TODAY’S OLD GOLDS No other cigarette can match the taste of today’s Old Golds. Regulars—Kings—or Filters ... they taste terrific ... a thanks to Old Gold’s nature-ripened tobaccos ... so rich, so light, so golden bright. Buy A Carton Today* m I *nr, '0$ Copyright 1957 Harry H. Hollister^